hello,
i am planning as you know to put basiclinux 1.7 on my new (old) computer. it is a very slimmed down version of slackware 3.5. It is so slim that many utilities seem to not be there. missing so far, seem to be useradd or adduser and netstat. no doubt i will discover many other utils that i don't have too, the likes of make or others.
What i want to know is, can i install these afterwards? (of course i can, but how?) and how would i go about it.
I will be discovering little things i need installed for a while i think so what's the best way to go about finding the util and then installing it? should i search the slackware public download directories? or can i use BSD sources? or what is best? is it bad to get BSD versions of things since some programs or utilities will expect GNU versions, or vice versa?
i did a search for installing slackware netstat on google, but it was no help since all the pages were ones where i was being told to install something else, and run netstat. most people assume you have all these utils installed already since i assume a normal slackware install would include them all. what i want to know is how to literally put those things on there myself.
There's a third floppy's worth of install disk for basiclinux though, meaning that as i am currently running it from the two floppy version, maybe the third install disk adds certain utils (like netstat or adduser) when i finally put it on the hard drive, if you get what i mean.
Anyway, any help would be appreciated. i am not asking for specifics, although they would of course be welcome, i'm just asking for a kind of rule of thumb way to install basic missing components.
oddly, it seems that ipfwadm, netsetup and pppsetup are all included with basiclinux even though adduser and netstat (and no doubt a lot of others) are not!
edit - oh yeah, and i bet passwd isn't included either, and i need that for sure!
[ November 21, 2002: Message edited by: Calum: Linux Commando ]